A wilāyah () or vilâyet (in Persian) and vilayat (in Urdu) is an administrative division, usually translated as "province" rarely as "governorate". The word comes from Arabic w-l-y 'to govern': a wāli 'governor' governs a wilayah 'that which is governed'. Under the Caliphate, it referred to one of the constituent near-sovereign states.
Use in specific countries
Arab World
For
Morocco which is divided into provinces
and wilāyas the translation "province" would cause the distinction to cease. For
Sudan the term
state, and for
Mauritania the term
region is used.
See also:
Provinces of Algeria
Provinces of Oman
Regions of Mauritania
States of Sudan
Governorates of Tunisia
The governorates of Iraq (muhafazah) are sometimes translated as province, in contrast to official Iraqi documents and the general use for other Arab countries. This conflicts somehow with the general translation for muhafazah (governorate) and wilāyah (province).
Kenya and Tanzania
In Kenya, the term wilaya is a
Swahili term which refers to the administrative districts into which provinces are divided.
Districts of Kenya
Districts of Tanzania
Malaysia and Indonesia
Wilayah Persekutuan is the
Malay term for
federal territory. In
Malaysia the term wilayah is used to represent central government controlled areas. Wilayah Persekutuan are the areas directly under the control of the federal government, which all other states in Malaysia are subordinate to. States such as
Penang and
Malacca enjoy far more autonomy from the central government, as they were former
Straits Settlements of Britain. A major difference between Penang Island can be seen in automatic granting citizenship to any persons born within the Island of Penang, regardless of the citizenship of the parents. This right is a derived form of a law from the British era called "
Jus soli". However neither Penang or Malacca actually practise their autonomy status in the spirit of unity within Malaysia. However east Malaysian states of
Sarawak and
Sabah practice a large degree of autonomy from the central government. Passports are required for a
Peninsular Malaysian to travel to Malaysian Borneo, although in the spirit of the union, these requirements maybe done away in the future.
One former state has been expelled in the past; the state of Singapore was expelled from the Malaysian Federation to form a new Republic of Singapore in the mid-Sixties.
In Indonesian wilayah means area, region or regional, but does not refer to a level of government.
The Ottoman Empire
Traditionally the provinces of the
Ottoman Empire were known as
eyâlets, but beginning in 1864, they were gradually restructured as smaller
vilâyets – the Turkish pronunciation of the Arabic word
wilāyah. Most were subdivided into
sanjaks.
The current provinces of Turkey are called il in Turkish.
Central Asia and Caucasus
The
Ottoman Turkish word for
province (
vilâyet) is still used in several similar forms in
Central Asian countries:
Provinces of Afghanistan (, Welayat or "Velayat"), subdivided into districts (, wolaswale'i)
Provinces of Tajikistan (singular: viloyat, plural: viloyatho), subdivided into districts (, nohiya or , raion)
Provinces of Turkmenistan (singular: welaýat, plural: welaýatlar), subdivided into districts ()
Provinces of Uzbekistan (singular: viloyat, plural: viloyatlar), subdivided into districts ()
In the Tsez language, the districts of Dagestan are also referred to as "вилайат" (wilayat), plural "вилайатйоби" (wilayatyobi). But the term "район" (rayon), plural "районйаби" (rayonyabi) is also used.
Caucasus Emirate, a self-proclaimed successor state to the unrecognized Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, is divided into vilayats.
Iran
In
Iran, the word is also used unofficially.
South Asia
In
Urdu, the term
Vilayat is used to refer to any foreign country. As an adjective
Vilayati is used to indicate an imported article or good. The British slang term
blighty derives from this word, via the fact that the foreign British were referred to using this word during the time of the British Raj.
Other areas
In Arabic,
wilāyah is used to refer to the
states of the
United States, and the United States as a whole is called "الولايات المتحدة" (
al-Wilāyāt al-Muttaḥidah) literally meaning "the United States".
Notes
Category:Types of country subdivisions
Category:Arabic words and phrases
Category:Malay language